Hawk Mountain

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Hawk Mountain
File:Hawk Mountain Stannik.jpg
View from Hawk Mountain
Highest point
Elevation Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).[1]
Prominence Lua error in Module:Convert at line 1851: attempt to index local 'en_value' (a nil value).[1]
Parent peak The Pinnacle [1]
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[2]
Geography
Hawk Mountain is located in Pennsylvania
Hawk Mountain
Hawk Mountain
Parent range Blue Mountain [1]
Topo map USGS New Ringgold
Climbing
Easiest route Lookout Trail (hike) [3]
Designated 1965

Hawk Mountain is a mountain ridge, part of the Blue Mountain Ridge in the Appalachian Mountain chain, located in central-eastern Pennsylvania near Reading and Allentown. The area includes 13,000 acres of protected private and public land, including the 2,600 acre Hawk Mountain Sanctuary.[4]

The River of Rocks is visible and accessible from the Sanctuary. The boulders were formed by periglacial processes in the Pleistocene epoch, or "ice age."

History

In 1929, the Pennsylvania Game Commission offered hunters $5 for every goshawk shot during migrating season,[5] as the birds were considered pests. In 1932, Richard Pough (a birder and photographer from Philadelphia) photographed hundreds of killed hawks and published these photos in Bird Lore, the predecessor to Audubon.[5] Thanks largely to the publicity brought by Pough's photographs, Hawk Mountain Sanctuary was incorporated in 1938, and in 1946 began year-round operations.[5] The Game Commission bounty was terminated in 1951, although birds of prey continued to face threats, including from chemical pesticides like DDT. Bird counts have been taken at Hawk Mountain since the end of World War II, with the Sanctuary counting its millionth raptor on October 8, 1992.[5]

Scouting and Civil Air Patrol

The mountain is also home to the Hawk Mountain Scout Reservation and Hawk Mountain Camp (two Boy Scout camps)[6] and the Civil Air Patrol's Colonel Phillip Neuweiler Ranger Training Facility (also known as the Hawk Mountain Ranger School).

Photos

References

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